Developers of Oaklands site in central St Albans appeal planning refusal

The developers of the former Oaklands site have appealed against the district council’s ‘non-determination’ of their application to cram more homes into the site.

Chris White, who ‘called in’ the application to be considered by councillors in public, said: ‘The application would see 20 more flats on this already cramped sites. the effect on local on-street parking and the general increase in traffic would clearly be detrimental to the area. I shall be writing to the planning inspector accordingly.’

Public meetings to be held for Shaping Our Community consultation

St Albans City and District Council has organised a series of public meetings for residents, businesses and community groups to air their views as part of a public consultation on its proposed strategy for locating future development in the District for the period 2011 to 2028.

The proposed strategy sets out proposals on the scale, location and type of development needed in the District, including housing, schools, infrastructure, retail, leisure, community facilities, transport and business development.

As part of the consultation on the long-term planning strategy for the District, people can also inspect the proposals and make their views known online on the Council’s website at http://www.stalbans.gov.uk/planningconsultation.

Information and plans can also been viewed at local libraries and at District, Town and Parish Council offices.

The consultation runs until 7 February 2011.

The consultation will feed into the Core Strategy for the District’s Local Development Framework, an important set of planning documents setting out the direction of planning policy in the District up to 2028.

The public meetings and presentations are as follows:

· Harpenden – 17 January at Harpenden Town Council, Council Chamber, Town Hall, Leyton Road, Harpenden, AL5 2LX. Time 7.30pm.

· Redbourn – 24 January at the Parish Centre, The Common, Redbourn, AL3 7NB. Time 7.45pm.

· St Albans – 25 January at St Albans City and District Council offices, Civic Centre, St Peter’s Street, St Albans, AL1 3JE. Time 7pm.

· Colney Heath/London Colney – 27 January at Colney Heath Village Hall, 83 High Colney Heath, AL4 ONS. Time 7.45pm.

· Bricket Wood – 31 January at St Stephen’s Parish Centre, Station Road, Bricket Wood, AL2 3PJ. Time 7.45pm.

· Wheathampstead – 4 February Wheathampstead Memorial Hall, Marford Road, Wheathamstead AL4 8AY. Time 6.30pm.

Council Cabinet members and planning officers will be at the meetings to provide information on the proposed strategy and to answer questions.

Oakland site appplication – Chris calls it in to committee

Chris has ‘called in’ the latest development application on the Oaklands site so as to be heard by councillors in public rather than be decided by officials.

The plan is to:

    ‘Change of use of Block D to include retention of block and all external elements (windows and structural columns); insertion of floor and subdivision of the block to provide sixteen studio units and four, one bedroom units at Block D.’

Chris said: ‘I am anxious to make sure that there is no further impact on local parking or on traffic.’

The plan reference is 5/2010/2739. Planning applications can be reviewed via
http://planning.stalbans.gov.uk/Planning/lg/GFPlanningSearch.page

Local housing targets set to be included in District planning framework

St Albans City and District Council’s draft spatial strategy for locating future development in the District, which includes housing targets, is to be considered in full by the Planning Policy Advisory Panel (PPAP) at a meeting on 25 November.

This follows the postponement of an earlier meeting of PPAP on 10 November, when uncertainty arose about the position on housing targets after the High Court ruled that a decision by the Communities and Local Government Secretary, Eric Pickles, to scrap regional housing targets was unlawful.

The previous government’s Regional Spatial Strategy had set a target of 360 new homes a year to be built in St Albans City and District. However, the Council has been considering setting its own housing targets and reducing this to 250 homes a year.

The Coalition Government has since made it clear that it will be including a clause in the forthcoming Localism Bill that will sweep away the previous government’s regional planning strategies including housing targets, clearing the way for the Council to set its own housing targets.

PPAP will now proceed to consider the strategy for locating future development in the District at the meeting on 25 November.

The strategy is a key part of the District’s planning framework and will form part of the Core Strategy of the Local Development Framework, which for St Albans City and District is now known as the District Vision. The strategy sets out where large scale future development proposals will be located in St Albans City and District from 2011-2028, including retail, leisure, community facilities, industrial/business development, housing and supporting infrastructure and explains how it will all relate and work together to ensure the District continues in the future to be a great place to live and work.

New development can bring substantial benefits for the community such as securing high quality local jobs, providing new schools, transport improvements and other facilities. The strategy will be used to manage this process allowing the District to grow in a controlled and sustainable way so that it best meets the needs of residents now and in the future and allows certainty to developers and the community about where new development will be located.

Housing development, which is only one element of the strategy, is being guided by the overriding principle of protecting and proactively managing the Green Belt and is led by the need to provide affordable homes for local people.

The Council is mindful of the need for the provision of social housing and has made it a priority to deliver 100 affordable homes a year.

Affordable homes are mainly provided as a percentage of new, private residential development. To help achieve its priority of delivering 100 affordable homes per year in a sustainable way, the council is increasing this percentage from 35% to 40%. This will mean that 250 new homes per year will need to be built in order to provide 100 affordable homes in the District.

The Council is also looking at opportunities for the development of council-owned land, such as garage sites to help deliver its priority of delivering 100 affordable homes per year.

Cllr Chris Brazier, Portfolio Holder for Planning and Conservation, and Chair of the Planning Policy Advisory Panel, said: “With a new 40% affordable housing target, a threshold of one house (gross) requiring a contribution to affordable housing and a new focus on the delivery of affordable housing on council-owned land, it is realistically achievable to deliver the Council’s affordable homes target of 100 homes per year with the 250 overall homes target.”

PPAP will also be considering strategic housing locations listed in the draft strategy.

Cllr Brazier added: “Apart from protecting the Green Belt, the main driver for the selection of strategic housing locations is the provision of infrastructure and community benefits, most particularly educational benefits for schools and colleges. Providing education facilities for young people and training opportunities for the whole community will help ensure development is truly sustainable.”

Making decisions about where to place development is not easy and the Council will need to consider the many different needs and views that the varied communities of the District have and as part of this it will be consulting residents. Before this happens, the Planning Policy Advisory Panel will consider the draft strategy on 25 November and make recommendations on its contents and the public consultation to Cabinet. These are then expected to be considered by Cabinet on 7 December ahead of the draft strategy for locating future development in the District being put out to consultation.

The consultation on the strategy is scheduled to run until early February 2011 with the results due to be reported to Cabinet in March 2011. These will then be used to help draft the full Core Strategy for the Local Development Framework. The Council will be seeking to adopt the Core Strategy in 2012.

Cllr Brazier concluded: “Protecting the Green Belt is the overriding principle behind the District Vision, which sets out the planning framework for St Albans City and District. Reaching agreement on the strategy and what is the right amount of new development, is a difficult but critical decision, but one that needs to be made so that change is positively managed and delivers benefits to our residents to improve their quality of life.”

Take part in St Albans Conservation Area consultation

The views of residents and local organisations are being sought by St Albans City and District Council on a draft document which defines the character and appearance of St Albans Conservation Area.

The document – the Conservation Area Character Statement for St Albans – is available on the homepage of the Council’s website at: http://www.stalbans.gov.uk , listed under the ‘Engage with us’ section. For those without internet access, hard copies are also available to view at the Council Offices or at St Albans Central Library, The Maltings, Chequer Street, St Albans.

Conservation Areas are areas that are considered by the Council to be of ‘special architectural or historic interest, the character or appearance of which it is desirable to preserve or enhance’.

In accordance with planning guidance, The Council has produced or is drawing up Conservation Area Character Statements for all 18 conservation areas in the District.

The Conservation Area Character Statement for St Albans explains why the area has been designated with this status. It defines the elements that make the area special and which need to be preserved and enhanced and also explains how the area developed historically.

Comments on the St Albans Area Character Statement can be submitted:
·        electronically via the Council’s website
·        by letter
·        on a comments sheet, which is available to download from the website or from reception at the Council’s offices.

Letters and comments sheets should be sent to The Conservation and Design Team, Department of Planning and Building Control, St Albans City and District Council, Civic Centre, St Peters Street, St Albans, Herts, AL1 3JE.

Responses need to be returned by 29 October 2010. The comments will be considered by the Council when finalising the Character Statement.

Brilliant News!

Aislinn Lee, Liberal Democrat County Councillor for the area of the proposed Freight Terminal has welcomed the decision by the Secretary of State to refuse planning permission for the Freight Terminal.

Aislinn commented on the decision: ‘This is absolutely brilliant news for Park Street, St Albans City, and surrounding areas. After years and years of dedicated hard work from individual residents, STRIFE, local Councillors and St Albans District Council finally we have the result we all so rightly deserve. When the community comes together with such a united front against this abominable proposal it is indeed gratifying to see that this Coalition Government made the right decision. I am simply ‘over the moon’!’

Council in talks with Tesco about London Road site

St Albans City and District Council is to meet with Tesco to discuss the future use of its London Road site following the supermarket’s decision to abandon plans to build a large store on the land and to relocate its city centre store to the old Woolworths building in St Peter’s Street, St Albans.

The Council is planning to consult with Tesco on the future use of the site, as part of its work on the emerging Core Strategy for the Local Development Framework (LDF) for St Albans City and District. The LDF incorporates work undertaken last year on the City and Rural Vision, which is now being combined to form a District Vision.

Cllr Robert Donald, leader of St Albans City and District Council, said: “I am obviously delighted that Tesco has decided to develop a store on the Woolworths site rather than the London Road site as this was never the right location for a superstore and reflects the views of the majority of local residents.

“However, I am anxious that action is taken by Tesco to bring its properties on London Road and Inkerman Road back into habitable use as soon as possible now.

“I welcome Tesco’s willingness to consult with the Council on developing the remainder of this site. The Council’s Chief Executive, Daniel Goodwin, its Head of Planning and Building Control, Heather Cheesbrough, and I, are meeting with Tesco in the near future to talk about their long-term plans for London Road so that they meet the key objectives of the Council’s emerging Core Strategy of the Local Development Framework. As part of that meeting, we will obviously explore the need for additional housing and the provision of a primary school site in the City.”

As part of the next stage in the preparation of the core strategy of LDF, the Council will be preparing Development Briefs for key sites identified in its City Vision document. The Development Briefs will provide more detailed information to developers and investors of the type and quantity of development the Council would like to see.

Cabinet decided in January to remove eight Areas of Search for housing development, all of which were in the Green Belt, from the Core Strategy for the LDF. This followed the initial phase of the Shaping Our Community consultation on the core strategy during which it became apparent that there was significant public opposition to the building of houses on Green Belt land.

The Council will now investigate other opportunities for housing development within St Albans and the District in order to find the balance of housing units needed to comply with its target of 7,200 homes by 2021.

Cllr Donald, added: “It is one of the Council’s priorities to safeguard the environment, especially protecting the Green Belt. This is a position that is supported by residents who made their views very clear through the public consultation. Following the withdrawal of the eight Areas of Search for housing development, we are now looking for sites elsewhere in the District that would be suitable for the building of homes especially brownfield plots. The London Road site, owned by Tesco, could be one of these.”

Further consultation is due to be carried out on the core strategy before a final report is published on the Shaping Our Community consultation at the end of March.